Selected article for: "effective pharmaceutical and SARS spread"

Author: Ponce de Leon, M.; del Valle, J.; Fernandez, J. M.; Bernardo, M.; Cirillo, D.; Sanchez-Valle, J.; Smith, M.; Capella-Gutierrez, S.; Gullon, T.; Valencia, A.
Title: COVID-19 Flow-Maps: An open geographic information system on COVID-19 and human mobility for Spain
  • Cord-id: ub1ky6nc
  • Document date: 2021_7_2
  • ID: ub1ky6nc
    Snippet: COVID-19 is an infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which has spread all over the world leading to a global pandemic. The fast progression of COVID-19 has been mainly related to the high contagion rate of the virus and the worldwide mobility of humans. In the absence of pharmacological therapies, governments from different countries have introduced several non-pharmaceutical interventions to reduce human mobility and social contact. Several studies based on Anonymised Mobile Phone
    Document: COVID-19 is an infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which has spread all over the world leading to a global pandemic. The fast progression of COVID-19 has been mainly related to the high contagion rate of the virus and the worldwide mobility of humans. In the absence of pharmacological therapies, governments from different countries have introduced several non-pharmaceutical interventions to reduce human mobility and social contact. Several studies based on Anonymised Mobile Phone Data have been published analysing the relationship between human mobility and the spread of coronavirus. However, to our knowledge, none of these data-sets integrates cross-referenced geo-localised data on human mobility and COVID-19 cases into one all-inclusive open resource. Herein we present COVID-19 Flow-Maps, a cross-referenced Geographic Information System that integrates regularly updated time-series accounting for population mobility and daily reports of COVID-19 cases in Spain at different scales of time spatial resolution. This integrated and up-to-date data-set can be used to analyse the human dynamics to guide and support the design of more effective non-pharmaceutical interventions.

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